Friday, March 24, 2017

MegaWiFi

Past year, I created a cartridge for the mythical 16-bit console SEGA Genesis/Megadrive. But it was not a boring standard 32 Mbit cartridge, it had an interesting feature: WiFi connectivity.

MegaWiFi cartridge, plugged into a MegaWiFi programmer

To achieve the WiFi connectivity, I have added an ESP8266 wireless module, and a small UART chip, used as a bridge between the ESP8266 and the parallel port of the 68000 CPU inside the Genesis/Megadrive.

Although adding an ESP8266 to almost everything is usual a trivial task, I took a lot of effort trying to make using this cart as easy as possible. This required:

As you can see if you browse the repositories, it is a considerable amount of work. Hardware is under CERN OHL 1.2 license, and software uses a mixture of GPLv3 and BSD licenses.

Although not still finished, with this cart you can currently use your Genesis/Megadrive to scan for access points and join them, create TCP sockets, send and receive data through them, generate random numbers, write and read to/from the internal 32 Mbit flash memory of the WiFi module (ideal for DLC contents ;-), synchronize the date/time to NTP servers, etc.

Echo test between a MegaDrive and a PC

I'm also currently writing a WiFi bootloader, to try easing game testing (allowing to upload and flash game ROM through WiFi). I hope this makes the platform attractive enough for developers. So if you like developing for old systems, and are brave enough, give it a try!